Wondering if one obtains a SVR from Hep C if they would be accepted as a donor? When I was diagnosed in 1994 the state made me turn in my driver's license which contained a donor signature and authorization. Today I received my 12 wk results-- virus undetectable!! If I am able, after full treatment, to obtain SVR I will want it written in all documents, in addition to living will, my wish to be a donor Thanks for letting us know about the donor holiday and keeping us all aware of how important it is to spread the word. Thinking of you and Themister, GC

Fact: Anyone, regardless of age or medical history, can sign up to be a donor. The transplant team will determine at an individual's time of death whether donation is possible.

From LiveOnNY

Frequently Asked Questions

What organs and tissues can I donate?

You can donate your heart, kidneys, pancreas, lungs, liver and intestines. You can also donate eyes, and tissues such as heart valves, cardiovascular tissue, bone and soft musculoskeletal tissue, and skin.

Who can be a donor?

All people can be considered as being potential organ, tissue and eye donors after death has been declared. Nothing should be ruled out. A doctor will make a medical determination at the time of death.Patients who have Hepatitis C may still donate organs to a patient who also has Hepatitis C. The same is true for Hepatitis B — but this happens less frequently. Most cancer patients may donate corneas.

Spread the word !themiz-Forum Moderator-HepatitisWife of themister, a fine man living with ESLD. Transplant list-2013

“Out of suffering have emerged the strongest souls; the most massive characters are seared with scars.” Kahlil Gibran

I have been on the bone marrow registry for about 20 years. Every few years they call to ask me if I still am willing to donate. Way back when I found out I had Hep C, I told them. They said I could still donate. I have been undetectable for the virus since 2012.nullum beneficium impunitum...

When Mike was transplanted, he got a form asking IF HE WAS WILLING, IF AT DEATHS DOOR, to accept a Hep C liver. They promised drugs were on the horizon. He would have done that. They also told him sometimes they used a less than perfect liver to sustain life with the notion a second transplant could be done. At this point in his 65th year he does not think he would choose a second tp...though he has not faced that decision, so I don't know.

First, I am so grateful you are alive because someone decided to donate.

And Mama Lama...So grateful Mike is alive due to a someone donating.

In the 1990's I heard a news report about a female police officer who would die without a bone marrow transplant. It was a heartbreaking story. Such a simple thing to do, and I did not need to die to be on the bone marrow registry! I think when we get to a personal level with such stories.... see real people with their very real and wonderful lives that will soon be cut short...urgency sinks in.

I went to the tent pitched outside a prison gate where the mass registration campaign was being held. And it was packed. Just like that I was on the bone marrow registry! How I hoped I would be her match. But no. Her story disappeared and I would get updates over the years about the donor registry, but I was never a match.

Now I feel the real impact of donation. I watch each day as my sweetheart becomes sicker than sick. I held his head last year as he was unconscious and turned blue in a hepatic episode, while waiting for emergency EMT's to arrive. He survived, but I know how fragile life is.

Knowing others can impact real lives when theirs has ended. Clicking a link. This is so simple. So simple. Big Hugs

www.organdonor.govthemiz-Forum Moderator-HepatitisWife of themister, a fine man living with ESLD. Transplant list-2013

“Out of suffering have emerged the strongest souls; the most massive characters are seared with scars.” Kahlil Gibran

MamaLama said...When Mike was transplanted, he got a form asking IF HE WAS WILLING, IF AT DEATHS DOOR, to accept a Hep C liver. They promised drugs were on the horizon. He would have done that. They also told him sometimes they used a less than perfect liver to sustain life with the notion a second transplant could be done. At this point in his 65th year he does not think he would choose a second tp...though he has not faced that decision, so I don't know.

Hugs,MamaLama

If someone is Hep C positive,.... as Mike was....a Hep C positive liver (not cirrhotic) should not impact the transplant . Here is the info I read about that.

I met a guy at the transplant clinic that had a transplant the day after I did. He was in really bad shape, coughing up blood when he came in to MGH. They asked him if he would opt for a HIV positive liver, if things got too bad. Didn't sound like a good choice, but at the time, treating HIV was a better possibility than treating Hep C. That was a little over 5 years ago. He drove all the way from Maine to Boston when he got the call. Talk about a tough guy.nullum beneficium impunitum...